Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 8

5 years after the worldʼs largest garment factory collapse, is safety in Bangladesh any better?

| PBS NewsHour 4/29/20, 1)35 PM

Coronavirus Coverage Watch live Essential FAQ U.S. coronavirus map Listen: Special podcast episode

5 years after the world’s largest garment factory collapse, is safety in Bangladesh
any better?
World Apr 6, 2018 3:30 PM EDT

It’s considered the worst garment industry accident of all time: An eight-story building housing several garment factories and a shopping center called Rana Plaza
collapsed five years ago in Bangladesh, killing more than 1,000 workers and injuring more than 2,500.

Officials discovered the top four floors were constructed without building permits. The owner of the building, Sohel Rana, was convicted on corruption charges and
sentenced to three years in prison. Murder charges are still pending against him.

Since the collapse, several initiatives have focused on improving factory safety. But researchers, retail alliances and human rights groups said more work needs to
be done. Here’s what we know.

The issue
Bangladesh is the second largest clothing manufacturer in the world, second only to China. The garment industry employs millions of people in Bangladesh, across
about 7,000 facilities, said Paul Barrett, deputy director of New York University’s Stern Center for Business and Human Rights, which has been following
Bangladesh’s garment industry since the factory collapse. “The remembrance of what happened in April 2013 is very powerful and still symbolizes a lot to the
people of Bangladesh.”

The garment industry in Bangladesh was fraught with problems when the building collapse happened. Fires often broke out at factories, and workers complained
about not getting paid, said James Moriarty, former U.S. ambassador to Bangladesh from 2008-2011. “You got to a point where the problems had to be addressed
absent a Rana Plaza. But Rana Plaza definitely was the catalyst to make it happen when it did.”

New alliances

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/5-years-after-the-worlds-largest-garment-factory-collapse-is-safety-in-bangladesh-any-better Page 1 of 8
5 years after the worldʼs largest garment factory collapse, is safety in Bangladesh any better? | PBS NewsHour 4/29/20, 1)35 PM

Workers condu
an Adorn Knitw
Dhaka, Banglad
Photo by Krista

In the weeks following the disaster, two coalitions representing major retailers joined forces and committed to making factories that supply them safer.

One was the Alliance for Bangladesh Worker Safety, composed of mostly U.S. brands, such as Gap Inc., Walmart and Target. The other was the Accord on Fire and
Building Safety in Bangladesh, signed by 220 mainly European companies and trade unions.

The groups set out to inspect all factories that supplied their members’ products, spotting deficiencies, evacuating those with serious structural concerns, and
ending their business with the ones that did not comply with needed improvements.

The Accord was a “game-changer” for how it combined transparency, giving workers a voice and enforcing safety requirements, said Aruna Kashyap, senior counsel
for the women’s rights division of Human Rights Watch. It made “brands put money behind lip service.”

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/5-years-after-the-worlds-largest-garment-factory-collapse-is-safety-in-bangladesh-any-better Page 2 of 8
5 years after the worldʼs largest garment factory collapse, is safety in Bangladesh any better? | PBS NewsHour 4/29/20, 1)35 PM

Brands, including those linked to the garment factories at Rana Plaza — Italian retailer Benetton, and Britain’s Bonmarche and Primark — joined the coalition
because “they understood this was a credible way of dealing with the supply chain issue,” said Joris Oldenziel, the Accord’s deputy director for implementation. The
companies paid membership fees up to $500,000 per year, depending on the value of apparel they produced from Bangladesh, to fund inspections, remediation and
training programs, Oldenziel said. The companies also provided loans to the factories for upgrades or offered to extend their contracts to entice factory owners to
make safety changes.

Rana Plaza was a “wakeup call,” he said, that “made it clear the government was not monitoring and enforcing the safety of these factories.”

What they found


A building safe
at an Adorn Kn
Dhaka, Banglad
the Rana Plaza
Mahr/Reuters

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/5-years-after-the-worlds-largest-garment-factory-collapse-is-safety-in-bangladesh-any-better Page 3 of 8
5 years after the worldʼs largest garment factory collapse, is safety in Bangladesh any better? | PBS NewsHour 4/29/20, 1)35 PM

Since the collapse, inspections at 1,600 garment factories under the Accord revealed more than 130,000 safety problems, including electrical and structural
integrity issues and a lack of safe fire exits, Oldenziel said. So far, 85 percent of those issues have been resolved. Inspectors ordered the temporary evacuation of
50 factories because of serious structural concerns, he added.

As for the U.S. brands, about half of the 666 factories that are part of the Alliance have completed fixes in the five years since Rana Plaza, and the rest have
completed about 80 percent of their fixes, said Moriarty, the Alliance’s executive director.

Barrett’s center found in total that about 80 percent to 90 percent of the 2,300 factories between the two groups addressed their deficiencies, from installing
sprinkler systems to building stronger buildings.

Another 109 factories that did not cooperate had their contracts terminated, which also meant they could not work with any of the brands who were in the Accord,
Oldenziel said. After 18 months, if the factories made required improvements, they became eligible to re-qualify for contracts.

Babylon Group
completed the
process and is
standards. Pho
for Business an

Both organizations have started programs to train workers, security guards and safety committees to conduct on-site monitoring. “Once you take a building that’s
safe, and you put people in it, people make mistakes,” Moriarty said. “Workers need to be able to identify dangers within the factory” and know what to do in an
emergency, such as a fire.

The groups also have set up 24-hour helplines for workers to report inappropriate practices. Moriarty said the Alliance’s helpline has gotten an average of 6,000
calls per month. “The workers trust it. Everybody knows the number — they put it on the back of their ID cards,” he added.

Though the focus is on factory safety, the helplines also help address other worker complaints, such as quality of food or bathrooms, and violence in the workplace,
Oldenziel said.

Issues that remain


In the last five years, safety has improved at the larger factories that have direct relationships with Western retailers and are under the supervision of two

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/5-years-after-the-worlds-largest-garment-factory-collapse-is-safety-in-bangladesh-any-better Page 4 of 8
5 years after the worldʼs largest garment factory collapse, is safety in Bangladesh any better? | PBS NewsHour 4/29/20, 1)35 PM

Most garment f
women. Photo
in Dhaka, Bang
Center for Busi

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/5-years-after-the-worlds-largest-garment-factory-collapse-is-safety-in-bangladesh-any-better Page 5 of 8
5 years after the worldʼs largest garment factory collapse, is safety in Bangladesh any better? | PBS NewsHour 4/29/20, 1)35 PM

initiatives, Barrett said. But workers at the smaller factories that have domestic contracts and those that are subcontracted – in other words, get the overflow work
from other factories – are still in peril, he said.

Those factories are under the responsibility of the Bangladeshi government, which has not done as thorough a job of inspecting or pushing for remediation, Barrett
said. “No one has been paying attention to them.”

In the wake of Rana Plaza, the Bangladeshi government merged its fire safety and building assessment efforts, but it still has hundreds of factories to inspect.

Barrett’s center proposes a shared-responsibility task force — including industry, government and other stakeholders — to enforce safety measures at the
factories that are flying under the radar. It would be similar to efforts in Detroit, where local businesses, governments and philanthropies joined forces and raised
millions of dollars to improve the city, Barrett said.

The cost of that center would be about $1.2 billion – based on the estimated $250,000 it would cost to bring each remaining factory up to the alliances’ safety
standards, Barrett said. The participation of many companies, the Bangladesh government and other international organizations like the World Bank would mean
that no one entity would bear the cost burden alone, he said.

Oldenziel and Moriarty, however, said retailers do not have an incentive to improve factories that do not supply them, and they wouldn’t have leverage with those
factories without contracts anyway.

“The factories have the fear of losing contracts if they don’t respond to the push for safety. If you take that relationship away from the factories, I’m not sure what
leverage they would have to drive progress in the factories,” Moriarty said. “Free money is a dangerous thing in Bangladesh. It tends to disappear. So I’m not sure
that the concept of giving small factories money is necessarily going to make them a lot safer. It’s something that would need to be worked out and watched
closely.”

What’s next
The Alliance and the Accord were both designed as five-year initiatives. They end in May. However, both organizations plan to continue monitoring and enforcing
safety standards after their expiration dates, and brands will have a chance to sign on again.

“We’re going to need to set up an organization that somehow cooperates with the government but is genuinely independent and credible in its operations,” Moriarty
said.

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/5-years-after-the-worlds-largest-garment-factory-collapse-is-safety-in-bangladesh-any-better Page 6 of 8
5 years after the worldʼs largest garment factory collapse, is safety in Bangladesh any better? | PBS NewsHour 4/29/20, 1)35 PM

Rana Plaza, an
housing garme
shopping cente
outskirts of the
Dhaka on April
Andrew Biraj/R

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/5-years-after-the-worlds-largest-garment-factory-collapse-is-safety-in-bangladesh-any-better Page 7 of 8
5 years after the worldʼs largest garment factory collapse, is safety in Bangladesh any better? | PBS NewsHour 4/29/20, 1)35 PM

The site of the


workers remain
now an empty l
All that remain
previous use ar
and discarded
April Gu/NYU C
Human Rights

The Accord hopes to transition its functions to the Bangladesh government once it proves itself capable of doing everything the Accord did: managing inspections,
enforcing safety improvements, providing transparency around factory progress, and offering a complaint mechanism for workers, Oldenziel said. Every six months,
the Accord reviews the government’s capacity to take on the duties, and so far has found that it is not ready.

Socially conscious buyers should make their voices heard to have the companies where they buy their clothes continue to apply pressure in Bangladesh to improve
conditions, Barrett said.

Garment workers earn the equivalent of about $64 per month — “that’s not enough to live on, even in Bangladesh” – and they are exposed to many risks, Barrett
continued. “It took a disaster as horrendous as Rana Plaza to shake the whole global fashion industry and make the industry realize that for whatever motivation –
whether it was for public relations, or a true humanitarian motivation, or a combination of the two – that something dramatic had to happen.”

Kashyap of Human Rights Watch said in addition to safety enforcement, the Bangladesh government should set up a national insurance plan for injuries on the job,
“so all workers across different sectors can at the very least be compensated for loss of life and disabilities, and receive trauma and other care in case of fire and
building safety disasters.”

The government also needs to amend its labor laws to bring it in line with international labor rights standards, she noted, and promote greater respect for workers’
freedom of association, such as allowing them to join unions. “It truly is one of the most powerful vehicles for worker empowerment,” she said.

By — Larisa Epatko

Larisa Epatko produced multimedia web features and broadcast reports with a focus on foreign affairs for the PBS NewsHour. She has reported in places such as
Jordan, Pakistan, Iraq, Haiti, Sudan, Western Sahara, Guantanamo Bay, China, Vietnam, South Korea, Turkey, Germany and Ireland.

@NewsHourWorld

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/5-years-after-the-worlds-largest-garment-factory-collapse-is-safety-in-bangladesh-any-better Page 8 of 8

You might also like